Like, the things you do to prevent disease and starvation are in what most folks would call the "drudgery" bucket. They are incredibly mundane actions. There's no drama or dynamism to canning peaches for storage, or remembering to dig your latrine sufficiently far away from your water source, and washing your damn hands, and so on. The core of good logistics is bookkeeping, which, again, isn't full of rising and falling tension itself.
You want to see threat of starvation as something interesting? Go watch the TV series Yellowjackets. In it the threat of starvation is basically a setting element that puts stress on the characters. It is not the actual dealing with the details of starvation, but how it drives interpersonal dynamics, that is interesting.